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Hunter Biden’s ex has reopened a 2019 paternity suit in Arkansas, alleging that the former first son hasn’t followed through on his child support obligations and claiming he ‘ghosted’ their daughter, Navy Joan Roberts.  

Lawyers for Lunden Roberts wrote in the new motion filed Tuesday that, in getting his child support payments reduced, Biden had agreed to give their daughter a ‘specified number of paintings he had created and that she had selected,’ court documents obtained by Fox News Digital said.

Lunden said the agreement was made because the paintings might carry monetary value due to his fame, and she considered it a way for him to bond with his daughter over their shared love of art.

When Roberts ‘gave Mr. Biden artwork by the parties’ daughter that the child had specifically created for her father’ after showing up unannounced at a past deposition, the ‘simple, pure act of love brought Mr. Biden to tears and was the sui generis of his idea for he and [his daughter] to ‘bond over [their] shared love of art,” the documents claimed.

That arrangement brought her family ‘joy’ because her daughter had ‘desperately longed for, talked about, and dreamed of a relationship with her father,’ the motion claimed.

His daughter had even allegedly said she ‘‘could not wait to get to heaven’ so she could ‘be with [her] dad’ because her dad does not see or talk to her because her dad ‘lives far away and is really busy’.’

Biden and his daughter began to bond, the motion claimed, but he quickly ‘ghosted’ her after Roberts wrote a memoir in 2024 about her relationship with him, but she didn’t ‘disparage’ him in it. 

She now believes his sentiment was for the purpose of getting his child support payments lowered.

Despite getting upset at a wedding when she realized ‘that her dad would not walk her down the aisle or dance with her at her own wedding reception,’ the motion claimed that Biden’s daughter is ‘grateful’ for how much he loves her half-brother, Beau Biden, Jr., whom Biden shares with his current wife.

He also shares three older children with his first wife. 

The little girl has even ‘defended the reputation of her grandfather, former President Joe Biden, against bullies,’ the motion claimed.

‘Ms. Roberts has reached out to Mr. Biden numerous times about [their daughter] asking to speak with him, but the defendant, in classic, classless form, refuses to respond,’ the documents said.

And while Biden has given her some paintings, the motion claims that his daughter hasn’t been able to pick out any herself, which was allegedly part of the child support agreement.

The motion urged the court to force Biden to ‘communicate with his child’ and to jail him ‘as a civil penalty until he purges his contempt by complying with this court’s orders.’

Her lawyers noted that Biden’s four other children live a lifestyle ‘above that of the average American,’ including their daughter.

‘It is axiomatic that no one can force Mr. Biden into being a good dad for [his daughter], but this court can make it so that [his daughter] has, at least, the same level of support as [her] younger half-brother,’ the motion added.

Biden first denied he was Navy’s father until a court ordered him to take a paternity test in 2019.

The 55-year-old was also convicted in a felony gun case last year for illegally owning a gun while using drugs, but he was pardoned by his father before he left office.

Fox News Digital has reached out to Biden’s lawyer for comment. 

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President Donald Trump signaled why he’s held off on military strikes on Iran amid nationwide protests after claiming the country had canceled executions for hundreds of Iranians. 

When asked if Arab and Israeli officials ‘convinced’ him to not strike Iran, Trump told reporters Friday he convinced himself and cited the canceled hangings. Trump also expressed similar sentiments on social media Friday. 

‘I greatly respect the fact that all scheduled hangings, which were to take place yesterday (Over 800 of them), have been cancelled by the leadership of Iran. Thank you!’ Trump said in a post on Truth Social Friday. 

The statement echoes what White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters Thursday about the canceled executions. She maintained that all options remained on the table when it comes to dealing with Iran.

‘What I will say with respect to Iran is that the president and his team have communicated to the Iranian regime that if the killing continues, there will be grave consequences,’ Leavitt told reporters Thursday. 

‘And the president received a message as he revealed to all of you and the whole world yesterday that the killing and the executions will stop. And the president understands today that 800 executions that were scheduled and supposed to take place yesterday were halted.’ 

It’s unclear from Trump’s post if he was referring to the 800 executions that were already canceled or whether there have been two consecutive days when 800 executions have been called off. 

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital on how many executions have been canceled or whether military strikes are completely off the table now. 

Fox News Digital reached out to a spokesperson for the Islamic Republic of Iran’s permanent mission to the United Nations for additional comment but did not immediately receive a reply.

Protests broke out across Iran in December 2025 in response to the country’s economic hardships as well as a referendum against Iran’s theocratic regime.

More than 2,000 people — including at least nine children — have died in the recent protests, the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency reported Tuesday. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado on Friday issued a warning to the Trump administration that interim Venezuela President Delcy Rodríguez does not represent the views of the people.

‘I want to insist on this: Delcy Rodriguez, yes, she’s a communist. She’s the main ally and representation of the Russian regime, the Chinese and the Iranians, but that’s not the Venezuelan people and that’s not the armed forces, as well,’ Machado said while addressing a crowd at an event organized by the Heritage Foundation. 

Machado said that the situation was complex as allies of Nicolás Maduro continued to do ‘dirty work’ after his capture by the U.S. on Jan. 3. However, the opposition leader said that she is ‘profoundly confident’ that there will be an orderly transition of power.

‘This is a complex place we are right now. Some of the dirty work is being done by them, but then the result of a stable transition will be a proud Venezuela, who is going to be the best ally the United States has ever had in the Americas,’ she said.

The opposition leader’s comments came amid reports that CIA Director John Ratcliffe met with Rodriguez in Caracas.

Ratcliffe and Rodriguez reportedly discussed intelligence cooperation, economic stability and the need to ensure that Venezuela would no longer be a ‘safe haven for America’s adversaries.’ 

On Wednesday, Rodriguez, a Maduro ally who served as his vice president, announced that the government would continue the release of political prisoners detained under Maduro in an initiative she touted as a ‘new political moment,’ according to The Associated Press.

Just days before Rodriguez made the announcement, the interim government freed at least four U.S. citizens detained in Venezuela, marking the first known release of American prisoners since Maduro was ousted in a U.S. military operation earlier this month.

While speaking at the Heritage Foundation event, the opposition leader vowed that Venezuela would become ‘the best ally the United States has ever had in the Americas.’ Machado said that she believes Venezuelans are cohesive and joined by shared values but have been forced by the regime to make difficult choices and suffer severe hardships.

Following the capture of Maduro on Jan. 3, President Donald Trump said that the U.S. would ‘run’ Venezuela temporarily, though he did not detail further plans regarding transfers of power.

Trump, who met with Machado on Thursday, has yet to back the opposition leader and has even expressed doubts about the amount of support she has among the people of Venezuela. Despite not having his clear support, Machado praised Trump and emphasized the critical role that he and his administration would play in the future of Venezuela.

‘The only thing I want to assure the Venezuelans people is that Venezuela is going to be free and that’s going to be achieved with the support of the people of the United States and the president, Donald Trump of the United States,’ Machado told the crowd at the Heritage Foundation event.

She also commented early in her remarks that the Venezuelan people were grateful for Trump and his team’s historic mission to capture Maduro. Machado said that it ‘took a lot of courage’ to pull off the operation.

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President Donald Trump is celebrating an increase in funding for healthcare focused particularly on rural communities across the country, a move was made possible by cutting ‘waste, fraud and abuse from Medicaid.’

‘As part of the Great Big Beautiful Bill, we’ve increased … funding for the healthcare by an unprecedented $50 billion. That’s rural healthcare. Nobody thought that was going to happen,’ Trump said during a roundtable Friday.

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act directs half of the rural health funding to be distributed evenly among all 50 states, with the remaining funds allocated based on state-specific factors, including the condition of rural hospitals.

‘We increased funding for rural health care by an unprecedented, record-setting $50 billion over five years, which will benefit Americans in all 50 states, and this was made possible by cutting massive waste, fraud and abuse from Medicaid and reinvesting those funds to revitalize hospitals in our cherished rural communities,’ he added.

The roundtable, which included Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Mehmet Oz, was aimed at promoting the Trump administration’s Great Healthcare Plan, which was announced during a White House press briefing Thursday.

Some have described the proposal as an effort by Trump to shape Republican messaging ahead of the 2026 midterm elections as the party tries to hold onto its slim majorities in the House and Senate.

In its fact sheet on the plan, the White House highlighted several main points, including lowering drug prices, lowering insurance premiums, holding insurance companies accountable and maximizing price transparency. Trump touched on several of the elements of the plan during the roundtable and said that hospitals that accept Medicaid and Medicare will be required to prominently post prices so that patients are aware of the cost of their care.

During the roundtable Friday, Trump implored Congress to enact the Great Healthcare Plan, but the president said he was confident Republicans would back it.

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When it comes to the Los Angeles Dodgers, nothing’s shocking. Yet their usual ritual come wintertime somehow manages to leave the baseball world agape.

It becomes a little blurry, Mookie Betts giving way to Freddie Freeman and Shohei Ohtani, which begets an entrance from Yoshinobu Yamamoto, triggering the arrival of Blake Snell and then, say, a hood ornament or two picked up along the way, like Teoscar Hernandez or Tyler Glasnow or Edwin Diaz.

Nine wintertime acquisitions since 2020, collectively guaranteed $1.56 billion in salary, all playing massive roles in back-to-back World Series titles.

This time, sated and spent, they’d surely back away from the trough, right?

Well, fool us 10 times, shame on us.

This is a deal that should reverberate for years. Let’s break down the most shocking elements of this California earthquake:

Kyle Tucker: Short on years, big on salary

Tucker celebrates his 29th birthday Jan. 17 – happy birthday, Kyle! – which puts him in an interesting bucket, age-wise, for an elite bat reaching free agency. He’s not Harper-Machado-Soto young, nor is he Alonso-Bregman-Schwarber old.

Still, your first big bite at free agency is usually your best. Tucker’s age and resume – four-time All-Star, two-time Silver Slugger, 27.3 WAR – would seem to spare him the draft-pick compensation anvil that dragged down the Alonsos and Bregmans in securing a long-term deal a year ago.

And while Tucker has opt-out clauses after seasons two and three, there’s also significant unknowns on the horizon.

Labor trouble could wipe out part of the 2027 season. Tucker will turn 31 before the 2029 season, which would be his first year on the market after an opt-out, and he’d be hitting the market at 32, going on 33, if he plays out all four years of this deal.

Additionally, shin and finger injuries, respectively, limited Tucker to 78 and 136 games the past two seasons. It might have seemed prudent to accept a structure that guaranteed Tucker well north of $300 million over, say, a decade, never again having to worry about free agency.

But Tucker has been betting on himself for a long time.

He resisted extension overtures dating back early in his career with the Houston Astros. Owner Jim Crane, averse to giving out massive deals to retain his own players in free agency, got ahead of it by dealing Tucker to the Cubs.

Tucker responded with 22 homers, 25 steals, an .841 OPS and a 2025 playoff berth for Wrigleyville. We gather he’ll be just fine on his next deal.

Yet the short-term, massive AAV deals have been bandied about for years, with Bryce Harper, for one, presented with a similar structure from the Dodgers in 2019. It’s just surprising to see someone jump on it.

Steve Cohen’s Mets: Outbid

Goodness, that would have been some corner outfield: Juan Soto and his $765 million deal in right field, and Tucker’s $50 million annual salary in left. Or vice versa. Whatever. The Mets would have kicked ass.

Alas, bottomless-pocketed owner Steve Cohen could not add the biggest free agent pelt to his wall two years in a row.

When it was reported two days ago Cohen offered Tucker a $50 million salary, it seemed the Mets had the market cornered on a short-term deal. Perhaps they’d lose out to, say, the Toronto Blue Jays if the Jays came forth with the more “conventional” package in excess of $300 million over many years.

Instead, the Mets’ best-and-final offer came in at four years, $220 million, according to the New York Post, their offer bumped to $55 million yet not quite enough to catch the Dodgers at the tape.

Seems Cohen had a ceiling with Tucker, whereas he clearly was going to go as high as necessary with Soto. Ah, well. Now club president David Stearns will have to deftly pivot, the roster now looking very much incomplete as we enter the home stretch of the offseason.

Dodgers veterans: Underpaid

Inflation’s tough, man.

While Tucker did not dislodge Ohtani from baseball’s highest annual salary – Ohtani’s $70 million over 10 years still reigns supreme – he’ll certainly take home a lot more pay, sooner, than the game’s greatest player ever and four-time MVP.

Famously, Ohtani deferred $680 million of his $700 million package, the better to position the Dodgers for free agent strikes like this one. He’s bringing home just $2 million a year, while Tucker’s deal defers $30 million, only slightly dinging the present value.

Mookie Betts? He’s pulling in an average of $31 million a year. Freddie Freeman? A mere $27 million per – and expiring after 2027.

Oh, they won’t be digging for change anytime soon. But perhaps Tucker might be compelled to pick up the check for the lads every so often.

The game: Not dead!

Yeah, those rumblings of a salary cap and ruminations that the Dodgers are Ruining Baseball were really a deterrent, eh?

Yes, the Tucker situation certainly isn’t ideal when it comes to spreading the talent around. At the same time, consider his finalists: The Dodgers, Mets and probably the Blue Jays. Big-market clubs, sure, but also well-run and motivated to win.

The Tucker investment was nothing that the Giants, Phillies, Yankees, Braves, Nationals, Red Sox, Angels, Mariners, Rangers, Cubs – even Tucker’s old Astros – couldn’t handle at various points in their competitive arcs. Destinations are created, not simply forged by opening a checkbook once in a while.

Tucker wanted to be a Dodger, just like Ohtani and Yamamoto, who turned down identical deals elsewhere. Just like Rōki Sasaki, who could’ve procured a larger signing bonus somewhere else.

Sure, this all doesn’t go down any easier for some lower-revenue clubs (there’s no such thing as a small market in the big leagues, see). At the same time, some franchises are born on third base. Sometimes you’re Arsenal, other times you’re Wolverhampton.

It doesn’t make your division any less winnable, your ticket to the playoffs any less valid. And when teams like the Dodgers are good, so, too, are the industry revenues borne of high attendance, record global ratings – and the revenue sharing that comes with that.

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CIA Director John Ratcliffe was in Venezuela’s capital of Caracas Thursday to meet with acting President Delcy Rodríguez and other top officials, a U.S. official told Fox News Friday. 

The meeting unfolded about two weeks after the Trump administration carried out a military operation capturing Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores. 

A U.S. official told Reuters Ratcliffe met with Rodriguez under the direction of President Donald Trump ‘to deliver the message that the United States looks forward to an improved working relationship.’ 

The two discussed intelligence sharing, economic stability and the need to guarantee that Venezuela is no longer a ‘safe haven for America’s adversaries, especially narco-traffickers,’ Reuters added.

On Wednesday, Trump said he had a call with Rodríguez and later described her as a ‘terrific’ person. 

‘This morning I had a very good call with the Interim President of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez. We are making tremendous progress, as we help Venezuela stabilize and recover,’ Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social. 

‘Many topics were discussed, including Oil, Minerals, Trade and, of course, National Security. This partnership between the United States of America and Venezuela will be a spectacular one FOR ALL. Venezuela will soon be great and prosperous again, perhaps more so than ever before!’ 

The same day, Rodríguez announced her government will continue to release prisoners detained under the rule of Maduro in an initiative she touted as a ‘new political moment,’ according to The Associated Press. 

Fox News Digital’s Diana Stancey and Bonny Chu contributed to this report. 

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Exiled Iranian crown prince Reza Pahlavi unveiled Friday a 6-step plan to exert pressure on the regime, which he declared ‘will fall, not if, but when.’ 

‘My brave compatriots still holding the line with their broken bodies but unbreakable will, need your urgent help right now. Make no mistake, however, the Islamic Republic is close to collapse,’ Pahlavi declared.  

‘Ali Khamenei and his thugs know this. That’s why they are lashing out like a wounded animal, desperate to cling to power,’ he continued. ‘The people have not retreated. Their determination has made one thing clear. They are not merely rejecting this regime. They are demanding a credible new path forward. They have called for me to lead.’ 

Pahlavi said he has a comprehensive plan for an orderly transition and asked the international community to do six things, starting with protecting the Iranian people ‘by degrading the regime’s repressive capacity, including targeting the Islamic Revolutionary Guard leadership and its command-and-control infrastructure.’ 

‘Second, deliver and sustain maximum economic pressure on the regime, block their assets worldwide, target and dismantle their fleet of ghost [oil] tankers,’ he said. 

‘Third, break through the regime’s information blockade by enabling unrestricted internet access. Deploy Starlink and other secure communications tools widely across Iran and conduct cyber operations to disable the regime’s ability to shut down the internet. Fourth, hold the regime accountable by expelling its diplomats from your capitals and pursue legal enforcement actions against those responsible for crimes against humanity,’ Pahlavi continued. 

‘Fifth, demand the immediate release of all political prisoners. Six, prepare for a democratic transition in Iran by committing to recognize a legitimate transitional government when the moment comes,’ he concluded.

Pahlavi’s remarks came as President Donald Trump seemed to remain ambivalent about the possibility of Pahlavi taking over the country if the Islamic regime were to fall. 

‘He seems very nice, but I don’t know how he’d play within his own country,’ Trump told Reuters during an interview on Wednesday. ‘And we really aren’t up to that point yet. 

‘I don’t know whether or not his country would accept his leadership, and certainly if they would, that would be fine with me,’ he added. 

When Pahlavi was asked Friday by a reporter about how he plans to win Trump over, he said, ‘President Trump has said that it’s up to the Iranian people to decide, and I totally agree.’

‘I’ve always said it’s for the Iranian people to decide. And I think the Iranian people have already demonstrated in great numbers who it is that they want them to lead to this transition,’ he added. ‘So I’m confident that I have the support of my compatriot. And as for the international leaders to assess the fact on the ground and see who is capable of doing that. I believe I can, and I have the Iranian people’s support.’ 

Fox News Digital’s Rachel Wolf contributed to this report. 

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The long wintertime staring contest between J.T. Realmuto and the Philadelphia Phillies is finally over.

Realmuto, the three-time All-Star catcher and highly respected handler of the Phillies’ pitching staff, agreed to terms on a three-year, $45 million contract Jan. 16, according to a person with direct knowledge of the agreement.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the deal, first reported by The Athletic, has not yet been finalized.

Realmuto turns 35 in March and while he has been worth between 2.5 and 6.5 WAR in the six full seasons since the Phillies acquired him in 2019, his advancing age gave the club some pause entering the offseason. Multiple reports indicated the club preferred a two-year term and while both desired a reunion, the team scheduled a Zoom meeting with free agent infielder Bo Bichette on Jan. 12.

Acquiring Bichette would have all but ensured Realmuto’s exit, but Bichette reached agreement with the New York Mets earlier in the day, and Realmuto’s agreement with the Phillies – which includes incentives worth up to $5 million per season – came together shortly thereafter.

Realmuto was acquired from Miami before the 2019 season and led the major leagues in games caught in 2022, 2023 and 2025. Despite that workload he has largely produced well above league average offensively, with his finest season coming in 2022, when he hit 22 homers with an .870 OPS and a 130 adjusted OPS.

But that mark dwindled to 91 this past season when he hit a career-low 12 homers in 133 games.

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There are all sorts of reasons to hate a sports team, and the Los Angeles Dodgers are perfecting one.

Outspend the competition by obscene amounts of money and build a nearly unbeatable roster.

They did it again on Thursday, Jan. 15, unofficially becoming the most reviled team in sports, agreeing with free agent Kyle Tucker on a four-year, $240 million contract.

Have they now established themselves as the most hated team in sports history?

The Dodgers might have bought themselves a third consecutive World Series while continuing to shop on Rodeo Drive. Consider the player contracts: Shohei Ohtani ($700 million over 10 years), Mookie Betts ($365 million over 12 years), Yoshinobu Yamamoto ($325 million over 12 years), Blake Snell ($182 million over five years) and Freddie Freeman ($162 million over six years).

Maybe the Dodger Stadium organist can hold out for a seven-figure deal too.

Here’s a look at some of the most hated teams in sports history:

5. Detroit Pistons (a.k.a. The Bad Boys)

The Pistons turned the cheap shots into art form.

It was mayhem between 1986 and 1993 with the likes of Bill Laimbeer, Dennis Rodman, Rick Mahorn and John Salley patrolling the court like attack dogs.

“The Bad Boys Pistons practically led the revolution in unsportsmanlike play in the NBA practitioners of the technical foul just as the technical foul became more prevalent,’’  wrote Benjamin Morris of FiveThirtyEight.

4. Duke basketball

Any year might be a good year to hate Duke basketball, but the 1990-1991 season was especially appropriate. Mike Krzyzewski was one of the greatest coaches in college basketball history. He also was one of the most insufferable. But what the team even easier to loathe was Christian Laettner.

In 2015, ESPN released a 30-for-30 documentary called, “I hate Christian Laettner.’’ And in during the 1990-91 season there was a lot of hate as Laettner helped lead Duke basketball to its first national title.

As Linda Holmes of NPR wrote, “People hated that kid, and they hated Duke. They still hate him, and they probably hate Duke even more now.’

3. New England Patriots

Jealousy fueled this hatred. Between 2002 and 2019, the Patriots won six Super Bowl championships and established themselves as a dynasty in infuriating fashion.

With head coach Bill Belichick wearing those obnoxious, sleeveless sweatshirts and Tom Brady leading a charmed life. Well, except for Deflategate and Spygate. Which were more reasons to hate the Patriots.

All that success, and the team allegedly was deflating footballs to win even more? It fueled hatred.

2. New York Yankees

The Yankees have exuded arrogance for much of the last century. But the cockiness reached new levels wearing pinstripes. He hit three home runs in Game 6 of the 1977 World Series, helping lift the Yankees to their 21st world championship.

And Jackson help lead the Yankees to another World Series title that next season as only he could.

Yankees teammate Darold Knowles, when asked if Jackson was a hot dog, replied, ‘There isn’t enough mustard in the world to cover Reggie Jackson.’

1. Los Angeles Dodgers

Congratulations. You bought your way to the top.

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The Evil Empire now resides in Los Angeles.

The powerful, formidable Dodgers, who have now become Exhibit 1-A in MLB’s argument that baseball needs a salary cap.

If it wasn’t enough that they have won two consecutive World Series championships.

If it wasn’t enough that they already landed the best closer in baseball in Edwin Diaz.

They now signed the best darn player in the entire free agent class, paying him a mind-blowing salary.

Yes, you read that right.

$60 million a year.

The only person who is earning more in baseball history is Shohei Ohtani at $70 million, and $68 million of his salary is deferred.

And Tucker won’t be bringing in over $100 million in endorsements and revenue like Ohtani.

The Dodgers now have eight players earning in excess of $100 million, from Ohtani’s 10-year, $700 million deal to Tyler Glasnow’s five-year, $136,562,500 contract. They now will have a payroll exceeding a record $413 million.

It was a staggering deal for Tucker considering it looked like a two-team race between the New York Mets’ 4-year, $200 million proposal and the Toronto Blue Jays’ long-term offer in excess of $300 million.

The Dodgers blew everyone out of the water, and 2½ months before the season-opener, are easily the favorite to win the World Series again.

Come on, you’re talking about a lineup that goes Ohtani, Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman, Tucker, Will Smith, Max Muncy, Teoscar Hernandez, Tommy Edman and Andy Pages.

Can anyone compete with that?

Anyone?

Anyone?

The Dodgers are the heavy, heavy, heavy favorites to win their third consecutive World Series championship with the largest payroll in MLB history.

The Dodgers don’t have a single flaw.

They needed a closer, so they signed Diaz, the best reliever in the game.

They needed another outfielder, so they signed the best outfielder on the market.

Who can possibly beat them?

How about, nobody!

Now that Tucker is out of the picture, it will be fascinating if the Blue Jays now turn their attention to bringing back Bo Bichette, and the Yankees double down in their efforts to re-sign Cody Bellinger.

The free-agent logjam is clear.

The path to the World Series suddenly has road blocks as high as the Empire State Building.

The Dodgers are a filthy-rich juggernaut.

They won’t be stopped.

But they will be the top example used for owners to demand a salary cap.

The Dodgers don’t care.

They’ve got another World Series parade to plan.

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

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